Descartes Award #3

The Grumpy Vegan launched The Descartes Awards because he’s tired of human supremacists who argue that animals are, well, animals and humans are a higher form of life because we shop. Rene Descartes was the seventeenth century French philosopher who denied animals the ability to think and — correctly, as it turned out, the inability to shop. Frequently considered to be “the father of modern philosophy,” he influenced generations of scientists into believing that animals were merely machines, famously comparing them to “clocks” lacking the ability to reason.

Chimpanzees may not cross the road to shop but when they do cross the road they use their own “Stop, Look, Listen and Think” safety program. Stirling and Tokyo Universities observed mixed groups of chimpanzees in Guinea, western Africa, crossing two roads that ran through their territory. One was a simple mud track and the other a road recently widened to carry trucks, cars and motorbikes. The Guardian reports:

“When faced with a busy road, large male chimps headed to the front of the pack to check the road was clear before leading females and their young across. Meanwhile, other males headed to the back of the group to bring up the rear. Often, a high-ranking male assumed the role of lollipop man by wandering on to the road and checking it for traffic until the entire pack had crossed safely.”

So, The Descartes Award goes to the chimpanzees who stopped, looked, listened and thought carefully before crossing the road.

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Taking Action for Animals

I’ve just returned from the Taking Action for Animals (TAFA) in Washington, DC. I thank everyone for its professionally organization, impressive attendance (about 700) and providing inspiration, information and practical advice. (I did not attend FARM’s AR2006 conference in August because I no longer professionally or personally support it. This is because all attempts by me and many others to persuade the organizer to make much-needed improvements were rejected.) Singer Nellie McKay and artist Patrick McDonnell showed during the Sunday evening gala it is possible to unite art with a message without compromising either. I attended TAFA to represent the Animals and Society Institute and spent most of the time at our booth. I was not able to attend the plenaries or the workshops. But it’s always great to see respected colleagues and beloved friends — some of whom were both!

I participated in a panel, “The Pen is Mightier than the Sword,” with Martin Rowe, Cat Clyne and Joseph Connelly. Afterwards, a lady approached me to say that she was introduced to animal rights when she received a subscription to The Animals’ Agenda. The magazine was her epiphany. It’s gratifying to receive such feedback four years on from its demise. But TAFA had one major flaw: the food. It was disgusting. There’s no other way to describe it. Well, yes, there is: inedible. My mantra (well, one of them) is that a well-fed meeting is a happy meeting. It was shameful that TAFA’s meals were so bad. This was also the second year boxed lunches were used. Please find another way. The large cardboard box and the plastic containers we’re incredibly wasteful.

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Vita Sackville-West and Animal Protection

Vita Sackville-West
The intersection of interests where seemingly unrelated fascinations collide always provokes deep mysteries and pleasures. The planetary conjunction of animals, gardens and Virginia Woolf recently occurred chez Grumpy Vegan.

Virginia Woolf is the Grumpy Vegan’s favorite writer. Her diaries and correspondence — and not, of course, to forget her literature — reveal a fascinating, creative and brilliant mind. Her life, too, was equally compelling. Her husband, Leonard, recounted their life together in a series of interesting biographies.

One of Virginia’s most intense relationships was with Vita Sackville-West, an author of many titles (fiction, biography, travel writing, poetry) but is perhaps mostly remembered — as a writer — for her garden journalism and writing. She created with her husband, Harold Nicolson, at their property, Sissinghurst Castle, surely the most beautiful of all English gardens. Sadly, only visited once by the Grumpy Vegan on a dreary overcast day but yet it still managed to shine brilliantly. In an exhibit room about the house and gardens and lives and loves of Harold and Vita (both gay, incidentally) you come across the printing press Virginia and Leonard used to produce books they published under the name of the Hogarth Press. (A must-read is Julia Briggs’ Virginia Woolf–an Inner Life to learn more about the creative process of writing and living.)

Anyway, recently, reading Vita’s 1939 collection of garden columns, “Country Notes,” the discovery was made of a couple of columns she’d written on animal cruelty, bloodsports and vivisection. They display a sharp, analytical mind. Clearly, she abhorred animal cruelty, including fox hunting, which she banned from Sissinghurst Castle. But her writings on vivisection reveal an informed, sensitive finessing of the issue where she reluctantly accepted the need for highly regulated animal research under the most strict of circumstances. This is, of course, a view not shared by the Grumpy Vegan but couldn’t help but think that if this fine line had been put into law what a difference it would have made in doing away with the vast majority of it.

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Chicago’s latest prohibition

Two sniffy articles (here and here) this morning on Chicago’s pate de foie ban that went into effect yesterday. Applause to Alderman Joe Moore who championed the ban. He sees this issue for what it is: animal cruelty. But people don’t like being told what they can’t do. They refuse to acknowledge the real issue and twist it around to something else. Why ban luxury ingredients? What’s next? It’s my money. Etc. Etc. These self-absorbed stupid rich people are too involved with their greed to see animal cruelty when it hits them in the, ahem, stomach. I would lock ’em up for eating pate de foie gras. But Chicago’s Department of Public Health spokesperson said he wasn’t “chomping at the bit” to enforce the ban. And Mayor Richard M. Daley calls the ban the “silliest law” passed by the city council. Mmmm. Anarchy in the USA?

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Absence makes the heart grow fonder ….

Apologies to all for the inactivity over the last week or so. When I started the Grumpy Vegan I promised myself to be a regular blogger. But I didn’t anticipate what happened recently.

First, I’ve been working on a major project for the Animals and Society Institute that had a major, non-negotiable deadline. The project is The Animals’ Platform CD that we will launch at The Strength of Many conference in Los Angeles on October 6-8.

Second, my Sony Vaio laptop crashed shortly after I started working on The Animals’ Platform CD! But thanks to Manni, our computer expert, I’m now up and running as of yesterday. But what a frigging nightmare it’s been over these past two weeks!

Normal service, as they say, will be resumed shortly.

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